The
glow of victory is all over Hillary Clinton since her big wins in last
week's primaries. America loves a fighter and she is turning things
around in the ring, as they say. However, neither she nor Obama can
win the requisite number of delegate votes, so it looks like a "brokered"
convention in Denver.

Where
are we going with this election?

While
the Republicans are growing calmer with their candidate, Senator John
McCain, growing fears within the Democratic Party that a "brokered"
convention in Denver could get ugly may become a reality. Visions of
Chicago's 1968 convention come to mind and are considered seriously
possible by the political pundits.

There
may not be blood in the streets as in Chicago, but arm-twisting in the
back rooms could reach the levels of grand guignol, that sado-masochistic,
French style of theater that ironically was distantly echoed and actually
prophesied by the unexpected presence of French playwright Jean Genet
at the 1968 Chicago Democratic convention. Among Norman Mailer's essays
there is an account of that convention and after reading it you'll think,
"No, not again! It's not possible."

Oh
yes, it is.

Racial
prejudice is America's knee-jerk explanation for any major issue involving
both white and black Americans. Throw in the apparent Latin bias for
Hillary Clinton and … well … poor Denver.

The
gloves are coming off, as they say. This drama's second act, after Hillary
Clinton's very questionable victory in Denver, will be the growing political
nightmare of Obama's rejection of the vice presidency. Hillary's offer
will, of course, be made "hush-hush", but the news of it will get out
and the next, even more questionable victory, the big third act of this
ugly melodrama, will be Hillary Clinton's victory over John McCain.

What
does that leave?

A
profoundly enraged America.

As
my regular readers well know, I liken the Democratic Party's support
for abortion to America's formerly legalized slavery. These are infections
that have festered and will continue to do so until they erupt into
some form of gangrenous, civil upheaval.

"Preposterous!"
cry the Progressives.

Hmmm
… slavery lasted 89 years in America. This nation's legalized aabortion
is already 35 years old. The Progressive Democratic Party is its fully
committed proponent … in the same way that Democratic Party had ssupported
slavery and the post-bellum South in the 1800's.

Old
songs.

It
is an old song that will again bring the "Progress" of this vaunted
"party of civil rights", drowning in its own hypocrisy, which will bring
it to a screeching halt. The demand of a "women's right" to abortion
mirrors the ruthlessness of Southern slave owners' rights. Of course,
none of this will be discussed at the Democratic convention. That Party
of the People will be too busy blaming each other to realize the actual
depth of its justifiable self-loathing, its inner rage for having denied
any rights to the unborn.

Despite
the increasingly suicidal nature of the Democratic Party's pro-abortion
policy, it will succeed one more time in gaining hold of the White House.
With such blazing hypocrisy leading the country, America is headed for
the worst four, war years she has had since the eight years of John
F. Kennedy and Lyndon Baines Johnson. Despite the new potential president's
promise to get out of Iraq, she – yes, Hillary will win – will find
it it impossible to keep her promise. It will be broken in the same
way President Richard Nixon could not immediately leave Vietnam, as
we thought he had promised.

In
other words, the most cunning, and possibly most long-lived of the Harvard
"geniuses" will not be Barack Obama, but will prove to be Dr. Henry
A. Kissinger. He is still haunting American foreign policy. If any one
man immersed the United States in a quagmire of bipartisan, Progressive,
political philosophy, it was Richard Nixon's moral doppelganger, Dr.
Henry A. Kissinger. His gift to American history was "realpolitik".
The present euphemism for realpolitik is Progressive realism. That "realism",
of course, must include and actually starts with a woman's right to
have an abortion.

Subscribe to the NewsWithViews Daily News Alerts!

Enter Your E-Mail Address:

The
direction in which Dr. Kissinger charted the Progress of our nation
still remains a secretive and Machiavellian style of both American foreign
and domestic policy. This style is hardly as old as the nation … however,,
the defense of such inhumanity as slavery and abortion is one of, if
not the oldest classic in the American Songbook.

Michael
Moriarty is a Golden Globe and Emmy Award-winning actor who starred
in the landmark television series Law and Order from 1990 to 1994. His
recent movie and TV credits include, Pale Rider, Who'll Stop the Rain,
The Glass Menagerie, Courage Under Fire, The Yellow Wallpaper, 12 Hours
to Live, Santa Baby, Deadly Skies and many more.

The
gloves are coming off, as they say. This drama's second act, after Hillary
Clinton's very questionable victory in Denver, will be the growing political
nightmare of Obama's rejection of the vice presidency.